Lecture 4 Flashcards

1
Q

Acquired stuttering has an onset typically in _______ with ___ language difficulties as a child. There are Two types: what are they?

A

Adulthood, No

1) Neurogenic stuttering: following neurological trauma or disease
2) Psychogenic stuttering: not associated with identifiable neurological problem

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2
Q

True or false men are more at risk for Neurogenic stuttering than women

A

True

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3
Q

What type of stuttering is most common following a stroke?

A

Neurogenic stuttering

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4
Q

Electric stimulation of which structure elicited effortful stuttering during surgery

A

L frontal aslant tract (FAT) - white matter bundle connecting SMA and Pre SMA to posterior IFG

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5
Q

True or false in neurogenic stuttering secondary symptoms such as facial grimacing, eye blinking, or fist clenching are always associated with moments of disfluency

A

FALSE - in neurogenic stuttering there are not always secondary symptoms such as this (about 50%??)

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6
Q

If someone presents with neurogenic stuttering and has the following symptoms: Rapid speech
Uncontrolled repetitions and prolongations
Long silences without struggle
Cluttering-like speech, what would you hypothesize caused the stuttering?

A

Head injury

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7
Q

If someone presents with neurogenic stuttering and has the following symptoms: Rapid movement attempts
Freezing
Prolongations or silent blocks hat would you hypothesize causes the stuttering?

A

Most likely a parkinson’s patient

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8
Q

Stroke patients with neurogenic stuttering are most likely to exhibit what symptoms?

A

More short-segment repetitions

Also longer words and phrases

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9
Q

In ________ stuttering Some patients show higher than expected medial and/or final segment disfluencies

A

neurogenic

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10
Q

_______ stuttering is Very rare, Adult onset
has No neurological factors,
and No secondary behaviours

A

Psychogenic

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11
Q

What are some treatments for Aquired stuttering?

A
Behavioural fluency treatment
Fluency enhancing (DAF)
Drug treatment
Surgical (deep brain stimulators)
Psychotherapy
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12
Q

________ is a disorder that effects the fluent flow of communication including Variable speech rate, multiple artic errors, voice issues (monotone, weak), repetitions, blocks, poor concentration but no frustration as in stuttering

A

cluttering

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13
Q

cluttering is characterized by what three main features

A

(1) a rapid and/or irregular articulatory rate; (2) a higher than average frequency of disfluencies, dissimilar to those seen in stuttering, and (3) reduced intelligibility due to exaggerated coarticulation (deletion of syllables or sounds in multi-syllabic words) and indistinct articulation.

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14
Q

True or false, in neurogenic stuttering we may also observe word finding difficulties, Frequent speech errors, Physical immaturity, clumsy, uncoordinated, Poor musical and rhythmic skills
Impulsive, Lack of awareness and/or concern

A

FALSE - this type of speech is characteristic of cluttering

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15
Q

approximately ____% of stuttering clients also have cluttering

A

5-30

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16
Q

What are some therapy options for individuals who clutter?

A

Working on concentration skills and memory
Sequential storytelling
Help to organize thoughts
Decrease of speech rate (DAF, prolonged speech)
Increased self-monitoring skills (audio and video)
Better pragmatic skills
Relaxation, visualizing (cognitive skills)